Doxing, regulation, and privacy protection : expanding the behavioral consequences of the third-person effect
Research output: Journal Publications and Reviews › RGC 21 - Publication in refereed journal › peer-review
Author(s)
Related Research Unit(s)
Detail(s)
Original language | English |
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Journal / Publication | Asian Journal of Communication |
Online published | 27 Mar 2023 |
Publication status | Online published - 27 Mar 2023 |
Link(s)
Abstract
This study investigates the third-person effect in relation to the internet-related practice of doxing. A national phone survey with a representative sample of adult citizens (N = 486) was conducted in Taiwan. The respondents reported that they were exposed to mediated messages about doxing through social media or news media. They tended to find others more vulnerable to the influence of media than themselves. The self-other discrepancy of perceived media influence was found to be associated with support for regulating doxing and intentions to engage in doxing. Perceived media influence on others was also found to motivate people to protect their privacy. The findings inform public opinion about doxing and expand the range of behavioral consequences that perceived media influence might induce. © AMIC/WKWSCI-NTU 2023
Research Area(s)
- Doxing, third-person effect, media restriction, privacy behavior, social media, MASS-MEDIA, CYBER VIGILANTISM, PERCEPTION, COMPONENT, CENSORSHIP, EFFICACY, COVERAGE, PRESS, MODEL
Citation Format(s)
Doxing, regulation, and privacy protection: expanding the behavioral consequences of the third-person effect. / Chia, Stella C.; Sun, Yanqing; Lu, Fangcao et al.
In: Asian Journal of Communication, 27.03.2023.
In: Asian Journal of Communication, 27.03.2023.
Research output: Journal Publications and Reviews › RGC 21 - Publication in refereed journal › peer-review